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Exhibition Text
A Land of Incomparable Beauty
Collective Ending, London


Written on the occation of A Land of Incomparable Beauty, the inaugral exhibition of Collective Ending HQ featuring Hadas Auerbach, Matthew Clifton, BLOAT Collective, Frances Drayson, Allan Gardner, Jonathan Kelly, Hannah Lees, James Lincoln, Luisa Mè, Irvin Pascal, Jesse Pollock, Beth Emily Richards, Giorgio Sadotti (11 July — 22 August 2020).

The exhibition text focused on  contradicting themes of the British countryside, a central thematic of the show. This included references to to the history of Arcadian imagery, folk horror and rave culture in Britain, articluating the countryside as a site for exploration deviation and dissent—for liberation. 



︎︎︎Exhibition Images

Extract —


    “A Land of Incomparable Beauty presents the sinister and eldritch underbelly, the skull beneath the skin of the countryside. A dream of England unearthed from dark soil in all its mystic passions, subversion and violence. A “Pastoral beat of the blood”, as Dylan Marlais Thomas once wrote, irreducible to utopian navel-gazing or macabre folk horror, of which British cinema has long held sway—The Wicker Man, Penda’s Fen, Blood on Satan’s Claw, The Killing List. It is a land consumed by belonging and alienation, a brutal reality of material hardship, discord, class division and racism. The “dark Satanic Mills” of William Blake at one with flaming pyres of cattle carcasses plagued with Foot and Mouth; a malign suffering heard in the shrill cries of a fox-hunt, or found in the lurid, pharmaceutical abattoirs of enforced growth hormones, genetic manipulation and maladaptive cloning.

    The entropic rotation from Spring to Winter Solstice. A life-cycle of desolation and rebirth displayed in Paul Wright’s rhapsodic 2017 archival film Arcadia as mirrored in the frenzied dancing of pagan subjects, dejected punks and rapturous all-night ravers, extending the end. Fatalist rituals and dark magik combine with illicit parties held in abandoned grain silos and nuclear bunkers, culminating in a delirious Sturm und Drang of synthetic pleasures: schizophrenic lasers cut through ash tree silhouettes like military optics on speed. Together we dance to the sun. Meanwhile impoverished children are dosed with UV radiation as a cure for rickets—because ‘it’s just as good as real light’. Courting falsehood, the countryside finds truth in artifice; between enlightenment and despair.

    Merrie Old England: a history of the enclosures, of 17th century levellerism and of kids sniffing glue in a poor seaside village. National pride slides into fascism and rural bliss passes into nostalgia. Yet magic and mystery remain. Mikhail Bakhtin once wrote that in rustic carnival one finds “temporary liberation from the prevailing truth and from the established order.” And so melancholy is ignited by fiction. The countryside as a site for exploration, deviation and dissent—for liberation. From Stonehenge to Bodmin moor, The Peasants' Revolt to the Criminal Justice Bill of 1994, it is a land of psychic and political struggle. As T.S. Eliot wrote of rural England in 1936, it is “Without elimination, both a new world and the old made explicit, understood in the completion of its partial ecstasy, the resolution of its partial horror.”

︎︎︎ Writing

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